Policyholders Will Love That Omnichannel Feeling

“I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”―Maya Angelou

“Customer intimacy” might be the latest catchphrase in customer experience, but I wonder how policyholders really feel about being more intimate with their insurance company. How close do they really want to be?

If customer intimacy provides a feeling of comfort, of being taken care of – of being treated consistently as a numero uno – then I suspect most policyholders would fully embrace the concept. And if the carrier can truly deliver on that promise, then you basically have a match made in heaven. Indeed, loyal customers have up to three times the net promoter value of passive customers.

The arrow into the heart of that relationship is via an omnichannel experience.. But it is not what the vast majority of insurance customers are experiencing today. Most insurers currently support multichannel interactions, but many of their portal and mobile capabilities remain siloed and deliver a disconnected experience to the customer. Omnichannel capabilities go beyond multichannel to unify online, mobile, and offline channels and link them directly with core systems to ensure a consistent customer experience, regardless of the interaction method.

Omnichannel means you’ll never have to say you’re sorry

Don’t risk disappointing your customers; instead, delight them. In the omnichannel world, channel switching is transparent for the customer, who never has to repeat or re-enter information, never has to wait too long for a response, and always interacts with a person or a system that understands the relationship and the context of the customer’s request. Isn’t that starting to sound like a relationship that is going places?

The key idea here is that you don’t want to leave the customer to wilt and die on the vine. Engagement can take many forms as it shape-shifts through channels, responding to and chronicling a policyholder’s life events – new home, new car, new baby, deaths, injury – doing what any good friend does.

Imagine, for example, as a policyholder, being alerted on your preferred device that your daughter’s car on your policy has been in an accident and help is on its way – before she is able to contact you directly.

Yes we have soup, but not for you

Love and true friendship can be elusive, however, so don’t expect it to be coming to the insurer near you anytime soon. The omnichannel experience emanates from the warm, fuzzy, and holistic inner workings of a digital insurer. And, alas, to borrow from the heartsick refrain, “A good digital insurer is hard to find.” A recent Accenture survey revealed that only 25 percent of insurers have a single view of the customer, and are working to improve the customer experience across all contact points. Given the tight link between customer-centricity and the digitalization of insurer operations, a lot of progress has yet to be made.

Why so little love from insurers? In all fairness, for some it is not for lack of trying, but they are knocking against the biggest obstacle – says the same study – faced by insurers executing a digital strategy: overcoming the challenge of legacy systems.

Enabling a true omnichannel strategy for insurers requires embedding and integrating this capability at the core policy, billing, claims, and customer account processing level. While vastly improving the customer experience, this strategy also has the huge benefit of allowing insurers to avoid unneeded integration to additional portal and mobility solutions, get their digital customer services to market quickly, and reduce overall sales and servicing costs.

At the upcoming ICTC2015, EIS Group will be illustrating how omnichannel capabilities integrated with core systems can keep policyholders in a customer care continuum as life cycle events unfold around them. Please join us.

Editor’s Note: Philippe Lafreniere is SVP at EIS Group and his broad background in insurance sales and underwriting and insurance software development and marketing informs his interest and evangelism for better core system solutions that help insurers improve operations and prepare for the future.